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Most of us won’t have a chance to blast off to outer space and glimpse the beauty of Earth at night. But designer Daan Roosegaarde’s firm Studio Roosegaarde brought that image of light and darkness to the Eindhoven Railway Station in the Netherlands. This new, interactive art installation, called SPACE, gives travelers the opportunity to, in the words of Roosegaarde, “experience a new dimension of light, just as an astronaut sees it in an orbit of the Earth.” Inhabitat spoke with Roosegaarde to hear more.

People walking through Eindhoven Station will now have a good reason to linger a while. Studio Roosegaarde‘s SPACE illuminates a tunnel with a 90-meter, or 295-foot, artwork, drawing on NASA satellite imagery of the Earth. Roosegaarde told Inhabitat the piece is “about wonder, and bringing some silence and imagination in this busy train station.” SPACE is located where Eindhoven Station’s main entrance once was, before it was renovated, and the art installation was designed to add the feeling of more space as it enhances the architecture.

The Studio Roosegaarde team opened Earth into one long strip, like you might peel an apple or orange. They digitally edited the NASA images into a composite 3D image. Using new technology, they printed images on special lenses to create the illusion of depth.

Roosegaarde told Inhabitat, “It sort of relates to 3D holiday cards: when you would rotate it you would see different images, the sort of hologram-type of feeling. Well, we went back to the lab, and really started enhancing that, so you have 45 images per lens, on 20 lenses.”

Controlled LED lights brighten the artwork, providing contrast between places like North Korea and South Korea, or around the Nile River in Egypt.

“UNESCO is actually working on the idea that a dark sky is a right, like an experience that everyone must be able to see the stars at night. They’re working on that to make that sort of like a world heritage,” Roosegaarde told Inhabitat. “And that is fascinating, because we work a lot with light, but we also appreciate darkness, and only using light when it’s needed. Why do we have streetlights burning the whole night when nobody’s there? That’s really stupid. Can we not make that smarter, more interactive, more personal?”

The images in SPACE come from outer space, but Roosegaarde was also inspired by the idea of “space in your head.” He told Inhabitat, “You look at it, and you wonder. I think there’s not a lack of money in this world, or of technology; there’s a lack of imagination. It’s space in your brain: space to think, space to imagine. That’s what makes us human. That’s our true capital.”

Eindhoven – which is the city of light – commissioned the artwork along with ProRail and National Dutch Railways for the train station’s restored passenger tunnel, which was designed by Luc Veeger of Arcadis. SPACE will be highlighted during Dutch Design Week, which will take place from October 21 through October 29.

SPACE Studio Roosegaarde Eindhoven Station

SPACE Studio Roosegaarde Passengers

They utilized what they called a specialized printing technique on lenses.

SPACE Daan Roosegaarde

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Eindhoven is the city of light, according to Studio Roosegaarde.

SPACE Studio Roosegaarde Image

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Eindhoven, ProRail, and National Dutch Railways commissioned the art.

SPACE Studio Roosegaarde Light Art

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The Dutch National Railways Agency said SPACE "establishes a poetic link to the technical networks that connect us worldwide."

SPACE Studio Roosegaarde Silhouette

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The design will be highlighted during the upcoming Dutch Design Week.

SPACE Studio Roosegaarde Earth

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Earth was peeled like you might peel an apple or orange for SPACE.

SPACE Studio Roosegaarde Travelers Full Width Tall

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Most of us won't have a chance to blast off to outer space and glimpse the beauty of Earth at night. But designer Daan Roosegaarde's firm Studio Roosegaarde brought that image of light and darkness to the Netherlands' Eindhoven Station. Their new, interactive art installation, SPACE, gives travelers the opportunity to, in the words of Roosegaarde, "experience a new dimension of light, just as an astronaut sees it in an orbit of the Earth."